Apples and Oranges Brain Games for Babies


Book Description

Sing and play with your litte one as you compare things in the world around you! This adorable board book includes games, rhymes, and tongue twisters to promote language development. Using story time to incorporate interactive play helps baby develop skills like sorting and comparing.




BRAIN GAMES PRESCHOOL WORKBOOK FOR KIDS FRUITS (5+ Years)


Book Description

Table of Contents 1- Line Tracking Exercises: It contributes to the development of hand muscles and attention skills of the students. 2- Mazes: The target in these activities; it is to reinforce the coding between the object and the word. Mazes are also applications that increase attention and reduce the lack of concentration. 3- Completing Missing Images and Texts: In these activities, it is aimed to associate the words and shapes that are coded and reinforced with visual perceptions. Visual perception coding will ensure that the word-object pair is permanent in the mind. These exercises also have attention-increasing features. 4- Finding Misspelled Words Activities: The aim of these activities is to eliminate the students' attention deficit and increase the visual coding effect by perceiving the words as a shape. 5- Matching Activities: Matching activities are aimed at testing students' coding success. Students are expected to achieve over 80% success in mathcing. Exercises related to mismatched words and pictures must be repeated. 6- Patterns fruits: In these activities, the student will develop logical reasoning skills by identifying logical relationships between shapes. 7- Patterns vocabulary: Patterns allow students to better understand logical loops and understand relationships between objects more easily. 8- Patterns mixed: In these activities, both the attention and the persistence of the English words were targeted through word-object matching by identifying the logical relationships between words and objects.




The Complete Idiot's Guide to Baby Brain Games


Book Description

Play that stimulates young minds. Play is the language that babies know best. Here, readers will find over 300 games to play with infants from one week to eighteen months old. Divided into games that stimulate cognitive, language, emotional, and social development, this book will delight parents and babies as it helps foster mental and physical growth. • Written by an internationally recognized authority on brain games for babies • No other book on infant play has as many games or is as effective in linking games with their mental and physical health benefits • Focused on helping parents teach their babies how to learn, rather than pushing them beyond their developmental level




125 Brain Games for Toddlers and Twos


Book Description

125 Brain Games for Toddlers and Twos Did You Know the Brain of a Toddler... has formed 1000 trillion working connections by the end of the third year (twice as many as adults have!); is twice as active as that of a college student ; can absorb and organize new information much faster than an adult's brain can. A young child's brain grows at a phenomenal rate in the first years of life, opening a window of opportunity for learning that occurs only once in a lifetime. 125 Brain Games for Toddlers and Twos is a fun-filled collection of ways to lay the groundwork for your child's future. It is packed with everyday opportunities to contribute to brain development during the critical period from 12-36 months. Each game is accompanied by information on related brain research and a description of how the activity promotes brain power in your child.




Brain Games


Book Description

Grab a pencil and get ready to become a problem-solving superstar with activities, puzzles, and games that will give your brain a serious boost. Master mystifying mazes, crack coded messages, and uncover the secrets behind optical illusions, all while learning about your own amazing mind.




Brain Games for Your Child


Book Description

Every child needs love and physical care, but also play that stimulates their thinking and helps boost their brain power. By playing with parents, grandparents and carers children can build their social and creative skills and get the mental stimulus that develops their brains. In Brain Games for Your Child Robert Fisher draws on his thirty years of research into children's thinking and learning to provide over 200 games to help children to build their thinking, number, language and social skills.From music and art games, treasure hunts and card games, word games and number battles there are games that can be played by all the family that will create bonds and build memories and help boost your child's brain power. Included are old favourites as well as new games, but what is common to all the games is interaction with other people, rather than with electronic screens, where communicating and playing with others provides the basis for developing the full range of a child's abilities.Brain Games for Your Child provides games to create a happy learning environment, encouraging educational skills through games that are fun. It provides a wealth of games to play with children of all abilities during the all-important first 10 years of life. This is an essential guide for raising a happier, brighter and more sociable child.




The Curious Book of Mind-boggling Teasers, Tricks, Puzzles & Games


Book Description

Mathematical dupes, sleights of hand, shady shuffles, and impossible predictions: these are just a few of the 80 ways to use a pack of cards to dazzle and baffle everyone.




Teaching Kids to Read For Dummies


Book Description

You’re thinking of teaching a child to read. What a great idea! Now all you need is exactly the right blueprint. This easy-to-follow book is written with two people in mind; you, and the child you’re thinking of teaching. Mother and children’s reading specialist Tracey Wood gives you all the down-to-earth, honest information you need to give a child a happy, solid start with reading. Teaching Kids to Read For Dummies is for parents of young children who want to give their kids a head start by teaching them to read before they enter school or to supplement their children’s school instruction, as well as teachers and caregivers of young children. Filled with hands-on activities that progress a child from sounds to words to sentences to books, this friendly guide shows you how to: Prepare a child to read Sharpen his listening skills Correct her errors graciously Choose the right books Have kids read out loud Find help if you need it Whether the child you want to teach is two or twelve; fast paced or steady; an absolute beginner or someone who’s begun but could use a little help, this empathetic book shows you how to adapt the simple, fun activities to your child’s individual needs. You’ll see how to make activities age appropriate, how to add more challenge or support, and how to make gender allowances if that’s relevant. Plus, you’ll discover how to: Lay the foundation for good reading skills Tell the difference between a reading delay and a reading problem Help your child build words from letters and sounds, advance to short and long vowel words, and conquer syllables and silent letters Select entertaining workbooks, recycle them, and make up your own reading activities Get your child ready for sentences Keep your child reading — with others or on his own Complete with lists of word families, phonics rules, and reading resources, Teaching Kids to Read For Dummies will help you make learning fun for your child as he or she develops this critical skill!




Pick a Circle, Gather Squares


Book Description

Fall is here, with all its wonderful visual delights—not just colors, but shapes! This clever concept book follows a family on a trip to a pumpkin patch and invites children to pick out shapes from the seasonal scenery—apple bushel circles, square hay bales, diamond kites in the autumn sky! Felicia Sanzari Chernesky’s sweet verses are perfectly complemented by Susan Swan’s gorgeous collage-inspired art.




My Daddy Ate an Apple


Book Description

So what happens if you eat an apple with a green worm inside? Not just any worm, of course, but a fuzzy one, a buzzy one, a great big fat juicy one! Children will love this story about Daddy Zebra's trip to hospital-and the surprise ending!